2 Knowing the Parts

Right Side

Refer to the diagram below to identify the components on this side of the Notebook PC.

Flash Memory

Phone

Audio

LAN

Slot

Output

Input

Port

PC Card

PC Card

Infrared

1394

Mic

TV Out

Modem

Eject

Slot

Port

Port

Input

On selected models

Port

 

 

 

On selected models

 

 

 

Flash Memory Slot

Normally a PCMCIA or USB memory card reader must be purchased separately in order to use memory cards from devices such as digital cameras, MP3 players, mobile phones, and PDAs. This Notebook PC has a built-in memory card reader that can read many flash memory cards as specified later in this manual. The built-in memory card reader is not only convenient, but also faster than most other forms of memory card readers because it utilizes the high-bandwidth PCI bus. More information is provided in section 4 of this manual.

IMPORTANT! Never remove cards while or immediately after reading, copying, for- matting, or deleting data on the card or else data loss may occur.

TV-Out Port (on selected models)

The TV-Out port is an S-Video connector that allows routing the Notebook PC’s display to a television or video projection device. You can choose between simultaneously or single display. Use an S-Video cable (not provided) for high quality displays or use the provided RCA to S-Video adapter for standard video devices. This port supports both NTSC and PAL formats.

PC Card Slot

One PCMCIA 2.1 compliant PC Card socket is available to support one type I/II PC card. The socket supports 32-bit CardBus. This allows accommodation of Notebook PC expansion options such as memory cards, ISDN, SCSI, Smart Cards, and wireless network adapters.

Infrared Port (Standard Infrared)

The standard infrared (IrDA) communication port allows convenient wireless data communication with infrared-equipped devices or computers. This allows easy wireless synchronization with PDAs or mobile phones and even wireless printing. If your office supports IrDA networking, you can have wireless connection to a network anywhere provided there is a direct line of sight to an IrDA node.

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